In
responding to last week’s release of details about high salaries for some BBC
staff, Corbyn made some good points. He
started by saying that the issue isn’t just about a few very high-paid performers
in one organization, and that the issue of gender inequality goes much further
than that. I agree. He moved on to talk about the
wider issue of pay inequality, and suggested a statutory limit of 20 times the
lowest salary in an organization for the pay of the highest paid. I might quibble a bit about the number 20,
but any number quoted in this context is going to be essentially arbitrary and
it’s better to start with a high limit than with no limit, so I agreed with him
on that as well.
Then he went and spoiled it all by adding the words “in the public sector”. Why?
Pay inequality between the highest paid and the lowest paid is a much
bigger problem in the private sector than it is in the public sector, and
insofar as pay inequality is a driver of wealth inequality and inequality of
opportunity, the private sector represents a much bigger problem. It’s as though politicians, of all colours,
can’t resist falling into the meme of believing that the public sector is
somehow less useful and needs more control than the private sector, despite all
the evidence to the contrary.
On frequent
justification for that line is that public sector salaries are somehow being
paid for out of ‘our money’, whilst private sector salaries are not. This is demonstrable nonsense. Taking just the world of broadcasting as an
example, there are three different mechanisms by which we all pay the salaries
of those involved. For programs on the
BBC we pay a licence fee for possessing and using a television set; for
subscription services such as satellite or cable we pay a monthly fee to allow
access to them; and for services supported by advertising, we contribute to the
salaries of those involved every time that we purchase any product
advertised. And in every case, that is
true whether we watch any of the programs or not. And in the case of programs supported by
advertising, we make that contribution even if we have no television.
In
all cases, the salaries of broadcasters and managers are paid for out of ‘our
money’, it’s only the route by which we pay that is any different. Broadcasting is but one example, similar
statements could be made about any other industry or activity – ultimately, the
salaries of those involved are paid for by us, whether as customers or
taxpayers, and the argument that we have a more direct interest in the salaries
of those paid for by one particular method stems from ideology rather than
logic. It starts from the underlying assumption
that the public sector is somehow a ‘burden’ rather than an asset, and it’s disappointing, to say
the least, to see Corbyn effectively starting from the same viewpoint.
1 comment:
Would you categorize the royal family for public sector pay awards?!
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